Low-birthweight babies (% of births) - Country Ranking

Definition: Low-birthweight babies are newborns weighing less than 2,500 grams, with the measurement taken within the first hours of life, before significant postnatal weight loss has occurred.

Source: UNICEF, State of the World's Children, Childinfo, and Demographic and Health Surveys.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Bangladesh 27.81 2015
2 Comoros 23.70 2015
3 Nepal 21.81 2015
4 Guinea-Bissau 21.08 2015
5 Philippines 20.15 2015
6 Senegal 18.46 2015
7 Lao PDR 17.31 2015
8 Morocco 17.28 2015
9 Madagascar 17.14 2015
10 Mauritius 17.06 2015
11 Benin 16.89 2015
12 The Gambia 16.75 2015
13 Togo 16.09 2015
14 Sri Lanka 15.89 2015
15 Botswana 15.63 2015
16 Guyana 15.62 2015
17 Namibia 15.53 2015
18 Côte d'Ivoire 15.46 2015
19 Angola 15.26 2015
20 Burundi 15.13 2015
21 Suriname 14.66 2015
22 Lesotho 14.61 2015
23 Jamaica 14.58 2015
24 Central African Republic 14.54 2015
25 Malawi 14.46 2015
26 Sierra Leone 14.42 2015
27 Gabon 14.21 2015
28 South Africa 14.21 2015
29 Ghana 14.16 2015
30 Mozambique 13.82 2015
31 Jordan 13.78 2015
32 Burkina Faso 13.14 2015
33 The Bahamas 13.14 2015
34 United Arab Emirates 12.68 2015
35 Zimbabwe 12.63 2015
36 Trinidad and Tobago 12.39 2015
37 Myanmar 12.30 2015
38 Cambodia 12.12 2015
39 Cameroon 11.96 2015
40 Bahrain 11.91 2015
41 Seychelles 11.67 2015
42 Bhutan 11.66 2015
43 Congo 11.61 2015
44 Zambia 11.60 2015
45 Kenya 11.47 2015
46 Turkey 11.40 2015
47 Malaysia 11.35 2015
48 Dominican Republic 11.29 2015
49 Ecuador 11.18 2015
50 Guatemala 10.96 2015
51 Vanuatu 10.91 2015
52 Honduras 10.90 2015
53 Dem. Rep. Congo 10.84 2015
54 Brunei 10.76 2015
55 Nicaragua 10.67 2015
56 Oman 10.54 2015
57 Thailand 10.52 2015
58 Tanzania 10.50 2015
59 Eswatini 10.32 2015
60 El Salvador 10.30 2015
61 Panama 10.09 2015
62 Indonesia 9.97 2015
63 Colombia 9.96 2015
64 Kuwait 9.86 2015
65 Singapore 9.64 2015
66 Bulgaria 9.56 2015
67 Japan 9.49 2015
68 Peru 9.40 2015
69 Lebanon 9.24 2015
70 Venezuela 9.10 2015
71 Antigua and Barbuda 9.05 2015
72 North Macedonia 9.05 2015
73 Armenia 8.98 2015
74 Portugal 8.90 2015
75 Hungary 8.77 2015
76 Greece 8.75 2015
77 Belize 8.60 2015
78 Brazil 8.38 2015
79 Spain 8.27 2015
80 Vietnam 8.21 2015
81 Romania 8.18 2015
82 Paraguay 8.09 2015
83 United States 8.02 2015
84 Rwanda 7.87 2015
85 Mexico 7.87 2015
86 Czech Republic 7.82 2015
87 Israel 7.78 2015
88 Uruguay 7.62 2015
89 Slovak Republic 7.60 2015
90 Costa Rica 7.48 2015
91 Tunisia 7.47 2015
92 Andorra 7.45 2015
93 France 7.44 2015
94 Argentina 7.35 2015
95 Qatar 7.32 2015
96 Azerbaijan 7.28 2015
97 Belgium 7.25 2015
98 Algeria 7.25 2015
99 Bolivia 7.22 2015
100 Italy 6.96 2015
101 United Kingdom 6.95 2015
102 Germany 6.65 2015
103 São Tomé and Principe 6.60 2015
104 Luxembourg 6.54 2015
105 Austria 6.52 2015
106 Australia 6.52 2015
107 Switzerland 6.47 2015
108 Canada 6.38 2015
109 Malta 6.32 2015
110 Chile 6.25 2015
111 Netherlands 6.15 2015
112 Slovenia 6.15 2015
113 Georgia 6.12 2015
114 Poland 5.94 2015
115 Ireland 5.89 2015
116 Russia 5.81 2015
117 Korea 5.77 2015
118 New Zealand 5.69 2015
119 Ukraine 5.63 2015
120 Tajikistan 5.63 2015
121 Kyrgyz Republic 5.53 2015
122 Montenegro 5.45 2015
123 Monaco 5.44 2015
124 Kazakhstan 5.43 2015
125 Mongolia 5.37 2015
126 Denmark 5.34 2015
127 Cuba 5.26 2015
128 Uzbekistan 5.26 2015
129 Croatia 5.10 2015
130 Belarus 5.06 2015
131 Moldova 5.00 2015
132 China 4.95 2015
133 Turkmenistan 4.93 2015
134 Albania 4.59 2015
135 Serbia 4.53 2015
136 Lithuania 4.51 2015
137 Latvia 4.51 2015
138 Norway 4.49 2015
139 Estonia 4.34 2015
140 Iceland 4.19 2015
141 Finland 4.12 2015
142 Bosnia and Herzegovina 3.40 2015
143 San Marino 3.26 2015
144 Sweden 2.41 2015

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Development Relevance: Low birth-weight, which is associated with maternal malnutrition, raises the risk of infant mortality and stunts growth in infancy and childhood. There is also emerging evidence that low-birth-weight babies are more prone to non-communicable diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Low birth-weight can arise as a result of a baby being born too soon or too small for gestational age. Babies born prematurely, who are also small for their gestational age, have the worst prognosis. In low- and middle-income countries low birth-weight stems primarily from poor maternal health and nutrition. Three factors have the most impact: poor maternal nutritional status before conception, mother's short stature (due mostly to under-nutrition and infections during childhood), and poor nutrition during pregnancy (United Nations Children's Fund [UNICEF], www.childinfo.org).

Limitations and Exceptions: Estimates of low-birth-weight infants are drawn mostly from hospital records and household surveys. Many births in developing countries take place at home and are seldom recorded. A hospital birth may indicate higher income and therefore better nutrition, or it could indicate a higher risk birth. Caution should therefore be used in interpreting the data. For the data from household surveys, the year refers to the survey year. For more information, consult the original sources.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual